As the web continues to grow, and debates about its governance structure take place internationally, China is investing significant time and energy pushing the ideology of Internet Sovereignty: that nation-states have the authority to govern the Internet as part of their domestic and foreign affairs. This puts China at odds with the US and its belief in an “inclusive and distributed stakeholder structure.”

Freedom House releases their fifth annual “Freedom on the Net” report. Unfortunately, the report catalogues a four year decline in Internet freedom. Among the causes, the report notes a rise in “problematic new laws ...in democratic and authoritarian countries alike,” arrests of journalists and activists and an increase of surveillance.

ICANN, the independent non-profit that manages many of the functions of the Internet, released a statement saying that it had been the victim of a “spear phishing” attack, in which a message that appears to come from within a company is actually a scam aimed at collecting personal data.

In Jewel v. NSA on Friday, the EFF argued that customers of AT&T had their rights violated through the upstream data collection initiative of the NSA. The case, which was filed in 2008, was initially thrown out, but enough data was later gathered to add legitimacy to the argument.